Lovecraft and Vermont

My Patreon patron John is considering a visit to Vermont, setting of Lovecraft’s story “The Whisperer in Darkness”. He asks: “Are there any HPL-related sites of special interest and worth visiting in the state?”


There are several Vermont sites known to be associated with either Lovecraft, his stories or correspondents/associates. But the question is which might be worth making the effort to see today. And in the month of September, or early ‘fall’ as Americans call autumn.

Initial Reading:

Reading Lovecraft’s own essay “Vermont – a first impression” (1927) will be useful if not already familiar. It’s easily found annotated in the “Travel” volume of Collected Essays. S.T. Joshi writes…

Lovecraft visited Vermont for the first time in the summer of 1927, returning in the summer of 1928. He did not actually witness the Vermont floods (a real event) [which later inspired the early incidents in “Whisperer”].

Dylan Henderson’s brilliant and well-written consideration of “The Promise of Cosmic Revelations: How the Landscape of Vermont Transforms “The Whisperer in Darkness”” (Lovecraft Annual 2021) would also be a useful preparatory read. Along with the 1977 edition of Vermont History journal, containing a short historical essay followed by a “Whisperer” plot-summary, “Dark Mountain: H.P. Lovecraft and the “Vermont Horror”” by Alan S. Wheelock. Lovecraft’s friend Orton later corrected some of the dates and biographical facts in this article.

The Goodenough and Orton sites:

A key site is the Goodenough farm in West Brattleboro, on the south-eastern edge of the state. Which it appears can still be visited, as by these young Lovecraft fans a few years ago on Lovecraft’s birthday…

Apparently the place is now held under the auspices of The Goodenough Farmstead Trust, with a covenant on the building and surroundings for its upkeep and restoration/preservation. They’ve had preservation grants for this in the 2000s, which appears to have given it a new roof judging by the above photo. It might be interesting if John could visit and show Lovecraftians how much progress has been made by 2023, and what its use (if any) is today. Also known to a local historian as the “Levi Goodenough Farm” in 2005.

Also the nearby Vrest Orton place, if it still exists and can be visited. Lovecraft himself states that Goodenough… “dwells not much above a mile from Orton’s”. Lovecraft spent two weeks at the newly acquired Orton place, and soon hauled some old clothes out of the barn in order to undertake heavy outdoor work with Orton. The work was re-directing the bed of a stream, mostly, if I recall correctly…

Lovecraft looks short here, but it’s a clever optical illusion. Orton is standing on a higher level of the lawn, and a letter says that Orton was not a tall fellow.

I never seen no country niftier than the wild hills west of Brattleboro, where this guy hangs out. Brat itself is the diploduccus’ gold molar [a big chunk of gold], with its works of pristine Yankee survival, but once you climb the slopes toward the setting sun you’re in another and an elder world. All allegiance to modern and decadent things is cast off — all memory of such degenerate excrescences as steel and steam, tar and concrete roads, and the vulgar civilisation that bred them — […] The nearness and intimacy of the little domed hills become almost breath-taking — their steepness and abruptness hold nothing in common with the humdrum, standardised world we know, and we cannot help feeling that their outlines have some strange and almost-forgotten meaning, like vast hieroglyphs left by a rumoured titan race whose glories live on in rare, deep dreams.

Lovecraft also partly drew on the landscape here for “Dunwich”, which he wrote…

is far inland [near the headwaters of the Miskatonic, and a] synthesis of the picturesquely retrograding Wilbraham country (near Springfield) with certain characteristics of southern Vermont” (Writers of the Dark).

Lovecraft probably refer to the terrain of his epic “escaped cow chase” in the company of the young Lee boys, Orton’s neighbours. This recalls the chase of the final monster in “Dunwich”. A “Lee’s Swamp” is mentioned in “Dunwich”.

My search for the Goodenough / Orton places in “the wild hills west of Brattleboro” in 2019 found…

If the Goodenough farmstead’s location is the address [340 Goodenough Road] at which the Goodenough Farmstead Trust is formally registered today (and satellite photography in Google Earth suggests it is, offering the same building layout, roof shape, and arrangement of of the grounds) then that puts it about five miles directly west of Brattleboro itself. This further suggests that Orton’s springwater-fed and oil-lit “eighteenth-century” place may have been in the hills somewhere off Akley Road, about a mile south of the Goodenough farmstead.

Amazingly, it’s not on Google Street View. Does Vermont not allow the Google cameras, perhaps? Or is it just too remote?

Brattleboro was also the home of Rudyard Kipling from 1892-1896, who less than ten years later was to birth hard science-fiction with the famous long story “With the Night Mail” (1905). He had married a Vermont girl, and their house was “on the north side of Brattleboro, towards Putney”. He wrote the Jungle Book books and Mowgli tales here.

The Akley home and farmstead:

The rustic naif artist-recluse Bert Gilman Akley (1871-1946), visited and met by Lovecraft in 1928. I recently found a postcard of the place in the Brown University repository…

The Akley house, one of the inspirations for “The Whisperer in Darkness”. Though the “set against a hillside” description also suggests the Goodenough farmhouse and the Orton house nearby. So probably the Akeley place in “Whisperer” was an amalgam. I’ve no idea if the actual Akley farmstead still exists, or if its site can be visited. Perhaps fellow Lovecraftians can advise. But it looks from the picture like it fits the other “Whisperer” descriptions of the exterior yard approach (re: the scenes with the dogs etc) better than the more enclosed Goodenough farmhouse.

The character of the very similarly named Akeley in “Whisperer” was more of an amalgam of Cook and Lovecraft himself, and perhaps Orton in terms of his able organisation of the place.

The ‘sightings of Mi-go in the floods’:

Lovecraft never saw the well-reported local floods except in press and magazine clippings, but in “Whisperer” the floods of November 1927 are used for the plot with locations…

three separate instances involved — one connected with Winooski River near Montpelier, another attached to the West River in Windham County beyond Newfane, and a third centring in the Passumpsic in Caledonia County above Lyndonville.

The “Guide to Lovecraftian Sites in Vermont and New Hampshire” also notes the Brattleboro Railroad Station and Townshend Post Office (where Akeley sent and received mail). I’ve found one evocative picture of the Brattleboro Railroad Station interior…

In the Brattleboro passenger station (an ugly new passenger and parcels depot, built circa 1916), in 1925.

Paul Cook in Vermont:

The long-time friend and avid weird book-collector Paul Cook later moved about a lot, I recall. But he was a Rutland, Vermont man and that was his home place. Under a pen-name he wrote stories of Vermont, collected recently in Willis T. Crossman’s Vermont: Stories (2005). It would be interesting to know if any of these have a weird flavour.

From Ex-presidents of the National Amateur Press Association: sketches, “Paul Cook”, page 93. A 1948 Arkham Sampler also noted that his poetry had been published and collected under the same pen-name.

In 2006 Cook’s home place of Rutland had a well-attended weekend “Lovecraft in Vermont” festival. The local newspaper’s details are unavailable outside the USA, due to the European Union’s cookie-madness, but I’ve made sure that the Internet Archive now has a copy. This led me to discover that the remarkable organiser, Lovecraftian and veritable ‘Indiana Jones’ passed away the next year, so one should not waste time trying to contact him.

Woodburn Harris:

As for research on correspondents and revision clients, it’s possible there may still be memories or documents relating to Woodburn Harris in his town of Vergennes, Vermont. He was a prominent and well-known leading man there. The recent publication of Lovecraft’s Woodburn Harris letters as a book might also interest the more antiquarian folk among the residents.

Walter J. Coates and his Driftwind:

Also, I recently looked at the location of the home of Walter J. Coates in Vermont. The address was North Montpelier, which actually turns out to be east of the main town. The East Montpelier Historical Society has online a detailed historical essay on the Coates little magazine and its editor, including several photographs. Thanks to John’s prompt I’ve now been able to re-find this (the link had been broken) and it (hurrah!) reveals the Coates / Driftwind location…

In November 1922, he and Nettie purchased the George Pray store in North Montpelier, and the Coateses and son John continued as the storekeepers.

So we do now have the place in a picture of the place, thanks to the postcard of North Montpelier I was recently able to find…

Nearby is one of the flood locations in “Whisperer”…

University collections in Vermont:

There is also an as yet un-inspected university collection in Vermont. As I wrote in June of a university collection at Burlington, Vermont

Mention of James Howard Flower and especially his “gem” of a poem “With Shelley in My Soul”). A footnote to Lovecraft’s comment reveals Flower was a Vermont revision client whose “Shelley” poem has “not been found”. […] if anyone’s in Vermont and near the University, it might be worth an afternoon sifting through the 1919-1925 boxes of the Howard Flower-Solitary Press Collection in search of Lovecraft mentions or material. “Collection is unprocessed” according to the Library.

Coates was doing revision for them, and my guess is that some of this work may also have been passed on to Lovecraft and/or Cook. One also wonders if Lovecraft ever had any poetry or letters in any of the Flower publications. Also, can Flower’s Lovecraft-admired “With Shelley in My Soul” be found again? Also at the same Library is the Walter John Coates Papers collection, though I’d assume that’s already been well-sifted for Lovecraft material. Still, a look at the complete run of Driftwind and other publications may be of interest.

Mythos fiction:

As for imaginative reading, it’s possible a set of Mythos stories involving Vermont could be self-assembled, though I don’t think there’s yet been a published anthology. One might start with Lin Carter’s “Strange Manuscript Found in the Vermont Woods”. Said to be in Crypt of Cthulhu #39, by a trailer for it in #38.


So my initial itinerary would be:

1. The farmhouse in West Brattleboro (Goodenough) and the Goodenough grave. Possibly also nearby places (Orton and Akley) it they still exist.

2. North Montpelier and the nearby Winooski River (Coates, flooding in “Whisperer”).

3. Perhaps Vergennes, Vermont (Harris) and Rutland, Vermont (Cook).

4. Possibly Burlington, Vermont for the university archives (Flower, and Coates).

As to “worth seeing”, who knows until one goes?

Review of the Lovecraft Annual 2022

Review of the Lovecraft Annual 2022.

Last year’s ‘curry coloured’ Lovecraft Annual 2022 is about to be edged aside by the new ‘brilliant blue’ 2023 issue of the S.T. Joshi edited journal. Thus I thought I should hurry up and post my review. Here it is.

The issue opens with “A Tale of Two Providences: Topographical Realism in “The Haunter of the Dark”, a close study of Lovecraft’s depictions of his own College Hill and the more distant Federal Hill in the city of Providence. The author asks why candles were not lit inside the College Hill study, to try to keep the Haunter at bay by giving at least some light? A valid query, but one perhaps open to objections. There had recently been strong storms and power-cuts, making it likely all the local stores had sold out of candles. But the main objection would be that the protagonist Blake clearly states that he needs to see out into the dark, meaning that his curtains must be open and the interior of the room totally dark. How else can he know if the power has been cut on Federal Hill? Though it’s later made very evident that the Haunter is ‘taking him over’ in some strange way, and perhaps restraining certain of his actions — such as lighting candles. The essay goes on to note that Blake tries to define himself at the end by giving his address, as if standing before a desk in a police station. This leads the author to many interesting points relating to Lovecraft’s own close identification with the fabric and layout of the city of Providence, including that if ‘he was Providence’ as it was circa 1900, then thereafter “every change that affected Providence also affected Lovecraft”.

My own research on “‘Uncle Eddy’: H.P. Lovecraft’s Used Bookseller” follows. I present several newly-found 1940s memoirs of Lovecraft, and test their veracity. Along the way I add to our understanding of the role of the Eddy family in Lovecraft’s life in Providence. This essay is the first investigation of ‘Uncle Eddy’, despite his being mentioned several times in passing in the letters. It shows, I think, what can be done when one ranges across the wealth of new 1920s and 30s resources now becoming freely available via Archive.org, Hathi Trust, Google Books, eBay and in the newly online large collections of the American museums and map collectors. Not to mention the Brown repository, which provided several useful items for my essay.

I wasn’t expecting much from “The Ripple Effect: Star Trek and the Lovecraft Mythos” but I found the essay engrossing, at least in its first sections which offer fascinating information about the impact of Lovecraft on some episodes of the original TV show (1966-69), via Robert Bloch and Samuel Peeples. It may help if the reader is aware of the classic Shatner/Nimoy first Star Trek, rather than all the later versions. But if not, it’s easy enough to view the episodes under discussion. The final section of the essay becomes a re-telling of the plot of Lovecraft’s “Whisperer in Darkness”, whereas I would have preferred deeper considerations of the philosophies involved in the context of the cultural dialogue between the 1930s and the mid 1960s.

“Solitary Conversation: A Bakhtinian Exploration of H.P. Lovecraft’s “Dagon”” is next. The author reads the story “Dagon” through the lens of the worthy theorist Mikhail Bakhtin. Who is best known in academia for ideas about ‘the carnivalesque’. But here his useful ideas are those about ‘polyphony’ (multiple voices) and the multiple layers of meanings that arise from this — even when we appear to have a single narrator.

““The Essence of Cosmic Mystery”: The Appeal of John Martin’s Paradise Lost Pictures to H.P. Lovecraft” is both well-written and fun, a rare combination for anything concerning Milton. In the first half we learn more about Martin than about Lovecraft, but I still found it an interesting read. Martin comes across as a Lovecraft precursor in the visual arts, dedicated to scenes of a proto-cosmic sweep and in which man is a puny and insignificant figure. Lovecraft felt that this partly arose because Martin, like himself, was technically weak on depicting the human figure but excellent in sweeping vistas and monstrous architecture. An interesting point, technical inability pushing an artist toward certain avenues of expression rather than others. There are no pictures here, all of which should by now be public domain, but one wonders if an illustrated free ebook edition might be possible at some point.

“Lovecraft and the Folklore of Glocester’s Dark Swamp” examines the accounts of the Lovecraft-Eddy trip in search of the swamp. Then, across twenty pages, exhaustively examines a range of previously undetected local lore and history relating to it or to thereabouts. The conclusion is that it’s ultimately impossible to know if Lovecraft or Eddy ever knew of such local lore. But again we see the wealth of unknown material that opens up once independent scholars have free access to online archives.

“A Note on Nodens in Lovecraft’s Mythos” looks at the sparse and transient use of Nodens in Lovecraft’s own work. Sources are pointed out in Machen and elsewhere, though the author doesn’t suggest the Neptune garden on a headland near Magnolia, on a shoreline that Lovecraft and Sonia knew well. One wonders if it was open to the public at certain times in the summer in the 1920s.

The estate (1904-1958) was at the end of Magnolia Beach… “Most summers, we lived in cottages on Magnolia Beach […] The famed Coolidge Estate was built high atop the rocky end of the horseshoe-shaped beach.” (Meredith d’Ambrosio). Demolished due to property taxes in 1958, and the land given to be maintained as a natural park in perpetuity. The red dot indicates the location…

The British archaeological and philological findings on the pagan deity Nodens are recounted (the River Severn, the Vyne ring, Nuada of the Silver Hand, etc) all of which will be familiar ground to many Tolkien scholars. The author also usefully looks at the Noden related idea of the “Great Abyss” of Lovecraft’s Dreamlands and how this and other voids might have related to the crucial early scientific idea of ‘the vacuum’ and the discovery of void spaces in which there seemed (at that time) to be nothingness. The subtle relations of Lovecraft’s work to the hard sciences is under-discussed, and I found this to be a welcome and unexpected turn in the essay.

The essay “Lovecraft’s Garden: Heart’s Blood at the Root” follows, with a long preamble that establishes for the reader the key themes in the uses of gardens and gardening by the Romantics (i.e. the Wordsworth era in English literature). There follows a two or three page survey of gardens in Lovecraft, with a few extracts from letters. Though the author was not able to unearth some very pertinent letters such as…

In childhood I used to haunt such places [florists’ shops] about February, when the strain of hated winter became unbearable. I liked to walk through the long greenhouses & imbibe the atmosphere of warm earth & plant-life, & see the vivid masses of green & floral colour. One of my early doggerel attempts was a description of an hypothetical glass-covered, furnace-heated world of groves & gardens …” (Selected Letters Vol. III, page 138).

A deeper and comprehensive survey of Lovecraft and gardens is needed from someone, I’d suggest. This essay is not it. But it makes a good start. The essay then concludes with a very long examination of Lovecraft’s long poem “The Garden” (1917), written when he was about 26/27. This poem is found to deploy themes and categories that would have been recognisable to the Romantics. The author contends that this early poetic Lovecraft can be understood to be what he terms a “Romantic ‘on the darkside’”. I would be interested in a sequel which might look at the Wildean and continental Decadents and gardens, in relation to Lovecraft.

We then have “The Authorship of The Cancer of Superstition and Lovecraft’s Late Readings on Folklore”, which shows that the Arkham House published text of CoS was hardly written by Eddy. Nor by Lovecraft, at least in the usual way. Rather it was Lovecraft’s short telegraphic synopsis, woven and patched together with a number of extracts that Eddy lifted from books which had been supplied to him for his research. The contribution of Eddy to CoS is thus judged to be about 15% of the total, as printed by Arkham House. On this matter, here are the key Collected Essays notes of Lovecraft’s outline synopsis…

HPL’s synopsis for a book combating superstition, commissioned by Harry Houdini; the work was halted by Houdini’s sudden death on 31st October 1926. His colleague in the Houdini work, C. M. Eddy, Jr., then attempted to write out the synopsis.

Joshi’s I Am Providence has it that this attempt at expansion was…

clearly by Eddy; I see little of Lovecraft’s actual prose in it, although no doubt many of the facts cited in it were supplied by him.

The author has established the book sources used to construct Eddy’s patchwork of post-Houdini expansion. The examination of these titles and authors leads to the suggestion that preparatory ‘Houdini reading’ for this joint project might have influenced the story “The Call of Cthulhu”. In terms of ideas about cultic idolatory, sunken temples, earthquakes as ’caused by the gods’, and astrology (“the stars were right”). Possibly, but Lovecraft was playing with such ideas long before that. So were many in Weird Tales, not to mention the Theosophists. Recall also the countless real ancient idols and primal carvings Lovecraft would have seen when visiting the New York museums, immediately prior to “Cthulhu”. Reading was not his only source of inspiration.

I wondered how many of the ‘book paragraphs’, the ones Eddy evidently had access to and largely plagiarised, might have actually come to him via Houdini’s notes (made from Houdini’s extensive book collection)? But I don’t recall this point being addressed.

Next is “Painting in Word Shadows: The Role of the Hidden and Unknown to the Reader in Lovecraft”. This surveys the main stories for examples of ‘unseen but seen’. For instance, when we see Cthulhu…

We are seeing the narrator’s highly condensed version of Johansen’s diary, which in turn is his censored version of something he did not truly understand written long after the events occurred, in a language other than the writer’s.

The artful obsurement of his monsters, while simultaneously depicting them in a manner in which the readers can paradoxically see them clearly for themselves, remains a cornerstone in the power of his work.

We then head into the book reviews. Steven J. Mariconda offers the reader a long and initially discursive chapter-sized look at Joshi’s The Recognition of H.P. Lovecraft (2021, though here “2012”) along with Joshi’s Journals 1974-1987 (2021-22, three volumes). Mariconda eventually comes to the judgement that Lovecraft’s enduring appeal is partly because…

he found the instruments for probing and documenting his own consciousness using the language of symbolism. […] he developed an art divorced from didacticism and ethical significance. He was devoted entirely to his vision, striving to embody it with perfection of form and complexity of technique. Over time he succeeded: his tales became progressively more intricate and layered. […] His concerns are not transitory [and mundane, but] speak to two fundamental issues — the unknown of the external world, and the isolation of existing inside a human mind.

And he did this when there was a growing need for a “new basis in art”, an art enhanced by the new sciences and their many interlocking revelations about humanity and the cosmos.

At a more workaday level Mariconda picks out a few entertaining ‘digs’ from Joshi’s new books. But overall observes that…

a few may be surprised at the mild tone Joshi adopts for the bulk of the Recognition. […] He even refrains from blasting certain academic Lovecraft criticism — vague, jargon-filled and detached from pertinent sources — which is manifestly inferior to many prior contributions.

There is also a useful outline of what is to be found in Joshi’s three-volume personal Journals, and a deep appreciation of Joshi’s decades of initially thankless and unrewarded labour on Lovecraft’s behalf. The Journals can be easily found as affordable Kindle ebooks.

The shorter reviews follow. The new publication of Arthur S. Koki’s 1962 Lovecraft biography is ably evaluated by Ken Faig Jr. Faig nods in approval at this early attempt, noting the extensive access that Koki had to many of Lovecraft’s still living friends and neighbours. He also notes and approves Koki’s still-unrealised hopes for a superb and highly illustrated edition of the Dream-Quest. I was interested to learn that Koki had owned a ‘How to Read and Write Spanish’ book seemingly purchased by Lovecraft in 1911 (age 21), who had written his name in it. Faig points out that this book is not in Lovecraft’s Library. But I would be cautious here, since we know that Koki was interviewing Loveman at that time. And Loveman was well known in the rare book trade for that kind of fake…

Nearly every catalogue that [the older] Loveman issued was tilled with fabulous ‘bargains’ — books signed by Melville, Mark Twain or Hawthorne — a whole galaxy of great authors. All priced at ten to twenty-five dollars each” (Joe Nickell, Real or Fake: Studies in Authentication, University Press of Kentucky, 2009).

As senility set in, Loveman got more and more careless about signing books, using ball-point pens for signatures of authors who had died before the ball-point pen was invented. His catalogs were an endless source of amusement to those familiar with his wares”. (Robert A. Wilson, Modern Book Collecting: A Basic Guide to All Aspects of Book Collecting, 1980).

So far as I’m aware Loveman never sold Lovecraft fakes. But I’m guessing that he might have made one as a quick present for Koki. Lovecraft had no sustained facility with Spanish that I know of. Nor would he have needed it. Since at that time the bulk of the immigrants to Providence were Swedish, Irish and Italian.

Bobby Derie then has a short review of Faig Jr.’s Lovecraftian People and Places, and finally Martin Andersson rounds out the issue with a short joint review of the new Miscellaneous Letters and Letters to Woodburn Harris and others. It’s stated that the Lovecraft letters are nearing the end, with only a few more volumes to go. But my hope is that funds can then be raised to go beyond these print volumes, by establishing a search tool for searching inside and across the full texts all of Lovecraft’s works, essays, poems and letters. Only snippets would be provided in results, in much the same way that Google Books works. This is not the sort of technical job that S.T. Joshi will want to take on, but with his support a major crowd-funder campaign could surely raise the funds needed to pay the professional coders and server-wranglers.


The Lovecraft Annual 2022 can be had from Hippocampus Press, and some might want to order it with the 2023 edition — which is set to appear very soon.

H.P. Lovecraft and Astronomy / Lovecraft Annual 2023

New on the Hippocampus Press site, the forthcoming book When the Stars Are Right: H.P. Lovecraft and Astronomy. A chunky 412 pages.

Also the new Lovecraft Annual for 2023 (No. 17) with nearly 250 pages and in a rather pleasing shade of blue…

Already on Amazon UK which has it shipping on 1st August, though also anticipating delivery by the 26th August at the earliest. Basically, still a pre-order then. A bit cheaper this year, at £12.

The Saturday Review 1919-1938

Newly uploaded to Archive.org, The Saturday Review for the Lovecraft years (1919-1938). A London weekly, so Lovecraft likely didn’t read it — unless perhaps the Providence Public Library took it for their Reading Rooms. But still useful today for getting a quick overview of ‘the currents of culture and concerns’ in any particular year, and with the British perspective which Lovecraft usually favoured.

Regrettably Archive.org won’t accept an inbound Web link formed as…

https://archive.org/details/pub_saturday-review-uk?tab=collection&sort=-date

Instead it auto-reverts, in a very annoying way, to filtering the collection by the pointless “weekly views” instead. So you’ll have to re-filter the issues by “date published” to make any sense of them.

Not the same as the Saturday Review of Literature which Lovecraft’s friend Vrest Orton was associated with. The latter currently only has two issues on Archive.org at present.

Lower Manhattan from Brooklyn Heights

This week on “‘Picture Postals’ from Lovecraft”, I have another try at finding his first grand sweeping view of New York City. Specifically the elevated view he saw at night of the New York City sky line.

As readers will recall, Lovecraft’s short New York story “He” opens with this vision of…

Coming for the first time upon the town, I had seen it in the sunset from a bridge, majestic above its waters, its incredible peaks and pyramids rising flower-like and delicate from pools of violet mist to play with the flaming golden clouds and the first stars of evening. Then it had lighted up window by window above the shimmering tides where lanterns nodded and glided and deep horns bayed weird harmonies, and itself become a starry firmament of dream, redolent of faery music, and one with the marvels of Carcassonne and Samarcand and El Dorado and all glorious and half-fabulous cities.

Later, as his deep disillusion set in, the vision became one of…

… Cyclopean modern towers and pinnacles that rise blackly Babylonian under waning moons” […] “a hellish black city of giant stone terraces with impious pyramids flung savagely to the moon, and devil-lights burning from unnumbered windows.

In his letters Lovecraft records several initial real-life “faery” views of the city, seen with either his friend Loveman or the poet Hart Crane or both. His key early view was from the roof above Hart Crane’s rooms at 110 Columbia Heights (the same rooms that had once been those of the crippled creator of the great Brooklyn Bridge). These gave a fine view both of the famous Bridge, the river and the Lower Manhattan sky-line. The building, a “brownstone” as New Yorkers called them, is now apparently demolished. But his key view was from the roof rather than the windows…

my first sight of the illuminated Manhattan skyline [being] from its roof!”

I looked at Crane’s the exact location in last summer’s ‘Picture postals’ from Lovecraft – the view from Columbia Heights. Of the view from his windows, I’ve since found that Crane wrote in a letter…

Just imagine looking out your window directly on the East River with nothing intervening between your view of the Statue of Liberty, way down the harbour, and the marvellous beauty of Brooklyn Bridge close above you on your right! All of the great new skyscrapers of lower Manhattan are marshalled directly across from you, and there is a constant stream of tugs, liners, sail boats, etc in procession before you on the river! It’s really a magnificent place to live.

Charles Graham’s illustrator’s view. Said to be 1896, but the Statue of Liberty is missing?

Judging by Internet searches there appear to have been various early attempts to picture the scene at night, though with limited success in photography due to the limitations of the era. Early masters like Alfred Stieglitz don’t appear to have tried to picture this particular view at night. Or if they did try, then the results are not online. Nor can any suitable b&w ‘nocturne’ lithograph of the view be found.

But some postcard creators, and their expert over-painters, did try.

But first some orientation. I’d say my arrow, seen on this Oilette card, about indicates the direction of view from Crane’s place.

Here we see the view of the towers of Lower Manhattan sketched in profile in the 1930s, after the Empire State building had arisen in 1930-31.

And a 1930s side view in fine photography.

Now a 1933 night dock-side view of Lower Manhattan. Close to what Lovecraft saw, but from too low an angle and probably too built-up compared to the 1920s. Those were the days before bamboozling bureaucrats and nay-sayers, when it might only take a year to build a New York City skyscraper. Some things about the skyline would have changed by 1933.

Here we see two early attempts at elevated-view over-painted night pictures, possibly from the 1900s-1910s. The sky line was then much lower. Crude pictures by the standards of our time, but not by theirs. And you have to admire the expertise of the over-painters who could turn day into night.

Some vintage night cards show the bridge itself at night, or pedestrians crossing it on the elevated ‘seagull level’ footway. Presumably the footway is what Lovecraft alludes to in the opening of “He”, when he writes… “I had seen it [the city sky line] in the sunset from a bridge”.

But painters rather than photographers did far better at depicting something of Lovecraft’s initial “faery” view of the towers from the bridge, as in this sunset view from the end of the bridge by T.F. Simon in 1927. This comes somewhat close I think, to the opening lines of “He”.

A fine picture, but I’m still hoping to find a really good ‘Lower Manhattan from Columbia Heights’ early/mid 1920s photographic view at night.


Incidentally, I found a “night over-paint” of the view down Fulton Street. A key Lovecraft stamping-ground is in the first part of the road that runs into the upper-left of the card.